What men keep getting wrong about foreplay

This is what really turns women on more than anything else

Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'

Unsubscribe | Report as spam | Change email preferences

—-Important Message—-

What men keep getting wrong about foreplay

When most men think of foreplay, they’re picturing it in the bedroom…

…where both of your clothes are already off…

…and you have to spend some time between her legs or kissing her to get her ready…

But what if you want to skip all that?

What if there was a simple method that gets a woman super aroused in seconds, while her clothes are still on…

Would you try it?

I’m about to show you exactly why this method is so foolproof — why it’s working so well for any man who tries it…

And why you’re going to want to be very, very careful how you use this method…

Because you can very easily arouse the wrong woman — or perhaps the right woman at the wrong time — in just seconds, thanks to this…

———-

This simple gut protocol reverses irritable bowel syndrome in men

IBD (inflammatory bowel disease) is awful to live with.

Symptoms can include diarrhea, cramps, loss of appetite, fatigue, fever, and more.

But the conventional treatments for IBD are limited and don’t always work very well.

That’s why when I see research that explains how IBD actually works, it’s always something I pay attention to.

In my experience, if you understand the underlying cause of a disease, it’s much easier to treat the disease itself.

Here is a graphic of what happens in the gut of a person who has IBD.

Can't see this image? Click on 'load images' or 'always allow images for this sender'

I want you to notice that there are a lot of things that are messed up in the gut of an IBD sufferer.

That’s because the gut is a complex system with many parts that have to interact correctly to be healthy.

Research from Weill Cornell Medicine shows that there are neurons in the gut that sense pain.

These neurons help to create an environment that promotes the microbiome which protects gut health.

The researchers, whose report appears Oct. 14 in Cell, found in a preclinical model that pain-sensing neurons in the gut secrete a molecule called substance P, which appears to protect against gut inflammation and related tissue damage by boosting the population of beneficial microbes in the gut.

In patients that have IBD, the number of these pain sensing nerves are smaller than in those that don’t have IBD.

The researchers also found that these pain-sensing nerves are diminished in number, with significant disruptions to their pain-signaling genes, in people who have inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

That means that in patients with IBD, the gut is lacking the resources it needs to create a healthy microbiome.

This leads to conditions that cause inflammation in the gut and often in the rest of the body.

Gut inflammation can lead to diabetes, dementia, high blood pressure, and other chronic diseases.

One of the things in this study that really caught my attention was that not only do these specific neurons regulate the gut…

…a healthy microbiome can help to activate the neurons that help to protect inflammation.

In other words, the communication between these elements of a healthy gut seem to go both ways!

Experiments also suggested that the signaling between neurons and microbes was two-way — some bacterial species could activate TRPV1-expressing nerves to get them to produce more substance P.

To me, this is a big deal, because it may mean that the answer for IBD patients could lie in fixing the gut microbiome…

…which could restore balance to the entire system!

I’ve seen people reverse severe IBD by fixing their guts. The results can be quite amazing!

Of course Big Pharma is looking at creating new treatments from this information.

That’s because profit is their primary motivation, and new treatments to treat a chronic condition like IBD are going to make them bank.

But the results so far suggest that the next generation of anti-inflammatory ‘treatments’ for IBD and other disorders could be compounds that target the nervous system.

But what I see is a deeper understanding of how leaky gut and IBD actually work.

Your gut health is critical to your overall health.

If you protect your gut, you can protect much of the rest of your body from severe disease.

—-Important Message About Getting a Healthy Microbiome—-

Use my free protocol to clean out your gut and enjoy longer-lasting erections in as little as 2 weeks

  • How does your gut microbiome help or hurt your penis? Once you know how to spot toxic Microbiome Mayhem and reverse its effects, your gut flora will be sending rich nutrients throughout your body, so you can last for 30 minutes or more, effortlessly…now sex becomes a lasting affair, sometimes hours of pure pleasure…
  • My Open the Gate Mechanism ensures that these rich nutrients will be able to surge through the lining of your penile blood vessels. Now nutrient-rich blood will always be able to reach your crotch dragon, so that you can make it roar whenever and wherever you want…even if you took your princess just 30 minutes ago.
  • I’ll teach you how to use my Gut Stamina Method so that you have the kind of endurance she’ll tell all her friends about. Now you’re realizing that you have the stamina to satisfy her every single time — 30 minutes to an hour of hot, steamy lovemaking… And when you do finish, you’ll be amazed at how quickly you get erections again, much to her delight…

All this and much more with this simple gut fix — free today

———-


Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
https://www.womenshealth.gov/a-z-topics/inflammatory-bowel-diseasehttps://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(22)01130-8?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS0092867422011308%3Fshowall%3Dtruehttps://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/10/221014135723.htm